The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, March 28, 1994 - 9 ROADS Continued from page 1 off right away. Almost from the moment they met, the freshmen called each other by the first syllable of their last names, followed by a long 'e.' "I don't really know how it started," Ollie *ays. "Back home, nobody calls me Ollie. But here, nobody on campus calls me David." There is a definite unity among classmates on the Michigan hockey team. Players who are the same age almost always live together when they move out of the dorms. After their freshman season, Stewart, Oliver, Wiseman, Stone, Shields and Ward noved into a house a couple of blocks away om Yost Ice Arena. For the next two years, the house was inhabited by Stewie, Ollie, Wisey, Stoney, Shieldsy, and Spudsy. The Dekers Club is the organization that -Helps the Michigan hockey program raise 'money and increase fan interest. Basically, it is a booster club. But unlike booster clubs for football and men's basketball - sports which "don't need help grabbing the media spotlight 0- the Dekers Club is more directly involved with the day-to-day operations of the team. .While the contact the football boosters have with the team is limited almost exclusively to "weekly luncheons with the head coach, the Dekers have extensive interaction with the hockey players and coaches. Although the club does not have direct input as to how money is spent, it performs ,other functions. The club runs the annual -$lue-White game, organizes raffles during he regular season and is in charge of the team's Parents' Weekend. As a result, the Dekers get to know Red Berenson andwhis players more than they ever could by eating one meal a week with the coach. They work with the coaches and they get to know the players. Wally Grant, who played for Michigan in the late 1940s, is president of the Dekers Club and one of the few former players *nvolved in the organization. To Grant, there is a simple distinction between the two players. "Aaron Ward was destined for Adirondack, because hejust wasn'tready. Cam Stewart is a Boston Bruins-type of player," says Grant, voicing what seems to be a widely-held belief in and around the Michigan hockey program: Cam Stewart moved on to the NHL, but Aaron Ward left Vichigan. Ward's career at Michigan lasted -'three years, but it was a short three years. He came, he played, he left. His career as a ,Wolverine was like a bad football team's offense. Three and out. Stewart also played three years, but they -were a full three years. He improved every season and in his third year, he became a star. As a junior, he scored 58 points, third on the team, and scoring wasn't even his ame. Stewie was there to hit. To make his resence known. When Cam Stewart was on the ice, everyone noticed. " Everyone also noticed when Ward was on the ice, but only because it was such a rare occurrence. Ward missed 10 games in his final year. Stewart missed one. "I think Aaron's best season was his freshman season," Grant says. "He played mediocre after that, really. You see a young man with the capabilities that he had play *like he did as a freshman, and then not meet those expectations in the next couple of years, and it makes you wonder if he has really matured enough to make the step. "That doesn't mean he won't make it .eventually, but I really do think Cam Stewart was more prepared. He's a hard- hitting guy, and he doesn't score a lot of goals, but he is a threat there as well. He is the kind of guy that Boston goes for." "Who is Wally Grant?" asks Ward, who knows exactly who Wally Grant is. "What has Wally Grant done in terms of a hockey career? He doesn't know what is in my best interest. It is ironic that so many people offer opinions as to what is in my best interest." They are doing more than just offering opinions. They are offering them to Ward. Directly. "When I first left, I received phone calls," Ward says. "They were overzealous fans who said they hoped I failed, and that they were going to laugh at me when it happened." Ward says he doesn't know who made the phone calls. Maybe they were just fans. Maybe they weren't. Either way, the calls reflected what Ward calls, "an outward hate toward me by the program in general." "Face to face, the sun was shining and the sky was blue," Ward says. "But behind my back, the thunder was rolling and I was getting stabbed." Stewart, of course, did not receive any such phone calls. He was everybody's favorite, a hard-hitting, team-oriented, blood-and-guts player. Earlier this season, he was knocked out in the first period of a game. He came back in the second period. It was a crazy thing to do, but NHL players are known to be a little crazy. That craziness, that willingness to give absolutely everything for the team, is why most in the Michigan program consider Stewart more of an NHL player than Ward. It is an image Ward refutes with one simple question. "Where is Cam Stewart right now?" *0s Providence, R. I. As Ward asks the question, Cam Stewart is in Providence, R.I. That is where the Providence Bruins play. Stewart got sent down by Boston Feb. 14. Valentine's Day. Stewart did not play poorly with Boston. He simply did not score enough. He registered only six points as a Bruin. He had his highlights. After the game when Stewart came back from being knocked out, television personality Don Cherry talked about Stewart on his show, Hockey Night in Canada. Cherry called him "a tough, young player from the University of Michigan." Back in Ann Arbor, another tough, young player from the University of Michigan, Mike Stone, sat in disbelief. "It was really weird, seeing Stewie on television," Stone says. "I'm sitting in the living room and all of a sudden my housemate comes on the TV. It was really weird." So Stewart, despite his lack of points, did not have an altogether negative experience in the NHL. Actually, he will get another shot now. He was called up to Boston Friday night. "I'm not ripping Stewie," says Ward, who wants to know this: If both players left after their junior years, and they both ended up spending a significant amount of time in the minors, then why is Ward being treated as the villain and Stewart as the hero? Why aren't they being treated the same? "Our main concern is that they finish their education," Grant says. "I haven't heard much about (Ward) coming back, and that bothers me a little bit. I really truly feel that Cam Stewart will come back and go to school." "I am going to come back in the summer EVAN PETRIE/Daily a year ago, before leaving Michigan early to Aaron Ward reaches for the puck in a game last season. Ward scored 12 points in 30 games join the National Hockey League. Ward and go back to school," Ward says. "I have 90 credits now, and I will take courses in the summer." Stewart came back to Ann Arbor in January to watch Michigan play Michigan State while the NHL was holding its All-Star Game. "He has a couple of days off, and what does he do?" Grant says. "He a goof. "I am a bit of an oddball," says Ward. "People here (in Glens Falls) call me a weirdo. I am a guy who does things rat's- ass backwards. I do some fucked-up things. Ask my roommates." "He did some things most college students wouldn't do," Wiseman says. "He gets dressed kind of backwards. He puts his skates on first, before everything else." He puts his skates on before the rest of his clothes. The body is ready to play hockey before it is ready to go out in public. This was a key to Aaron Ward's problems at Ann Arbor. He could run out onto the ice as a Michigan hockey player, but he couldn't walk out on the Diag as a Michigan student. "One of my biggest regrets is that I didn't make myself available to the students at the school," Ward says. "I got recruited when I was 16. I got to college and suddenly I wasn't on the social level of these people. What I wasn't ready for was the life." "1" When Aaron Ward was a freshman, he was barely 17, the youngest player in the CCHA. He had come in early to get into shape, but he still lagged behind the rest of the team in conditioning. Later that year, recalling a run up the steps of Michigan Stadium, he would say, "I was so slow, the pylons were speeding by me." When Ward came to Ann Arbor, he didn't have much confidence in his playing ability, and neither did anyone else. One day, Berenson called Ward into his office and placed 15 pounds on a cord around the freshman's neck. "How would you like to carry this around all day?" the coach asked. Ward understood. He was not working hard enough, and Berenson was letting him know it. So he set out to improve his conditioning and become one of the team's most valuable players. By the end of the year, he was. He made the CCHA All-Rookie team, the All-Great Lakes Invitational team and the All-CCHA Championship team. Coaches around the league drooled at his talent. He was big, he was strong, he was fast and, best of all, he was still learning. The word that came to everybody's mind was potential. It was a word that would come back to haunt him. Two years later, people still thought Ward had potential. They just wondered if he would ever reach it. But for now, he could do no wrong. When the NHL draft came around that year, Ward was expected to be a first-round pick. He had mixed emotions about where he was chosen. The good news was that he was drafted fifth. The bad news was that he was drafted by the Winnipeg Jets. Ward wasn't thrilled with the team - Winnipeg was in the middle of nowhere comes back to Ann Arbor. Aaron Ward, because of his personality, I guess, was just not that way." s0. "Once I signed, I was banned from using the facilities at Michigan," Ward says. "I was told I had to leave. Some guy had to tell me I couldn't go in, and I don't think he made the decision. Somebody told him not to let me in." OK, so Ward doesn't know who made the decision. Ward figures it could have been anyone. At this point, he doesn't know who he can trust and who he can't. Actually, there is one person in the program Ward knows he can trust - team manager Dave Lewis. Ward speaks to Lewis regularly, and he has flown Lewis up to Glens Falls so they can see each other. "Dave and I have formed a relationship," Ward says. "I have a friendship with him that is above and beyond hockey. We're best friends." Lewis is 14 years old. Soo "He's just ... young," Grant says. He is talking about Ward. "You know, he was a young man when he got to the team, and I really don't think he had matured - not necessarily physically, he was a strapping, young guy." Grant is saying Ward is immature. Not physically, but emotionally. Grant is saying Ward clowns around. He is saying Ward is and the Jets hadn't been a contender since god-knows-when - but he was Michigan's highest draft pick ever, so he was happy. Suddenly, Aaron Ward was more than just another bright young player. Suddenly, he was The Future. When Cam Stewart was a freshman, it was a different story. He was a solid player, a hard worker, but not a star. Four Wolverines made the conference's All- Rookie team that year. Stewart was not one of them. Stewart had been drafted before he came to Michigan, by Boston in the third round. After one year as a Wolverine, the NHL was not an immediate possibility. Maybe, with hard work and some improvement, the Bruins would want him someday. "". Ward came into his sophomore season expected to star. After all, he was chosen higher than anyone else in Michigan history, so he has to be a great player, right? He wasn't a great player, and would not.-...... be for the next two years. He was plagued by injuries and inconsistency. He showed flashes of brilliance, but they only served to reinforce the notion that Ward was not as good as he should have been. Stewart In the middle of Ward's junior year, Berenson felt strongly that the defenseman was not ready for the NHL. "What Aaron needs is a solid year of being a dominant player in this league," Berenson said. That dominant year was something that Ward never had. Stewart, however, did start to dominate. He was a hard-hitting, clutch-scoring forward. He was a presence. He was also coming back for his senior season. "He said all year, 'I am coming back, I'm going to be a co-captain with Wisey and play out my senior year and help our team win,"' Oliver says. In the spring of 1993, it looked like Aaron Ward and Cam Stewart would stay at Michigan for their senior seasons. 0o" On June 11, 1993, the trade went down. The Winnipeg Jets received forward Paul Ysebaert. Ysebaert had been a 30-goal scorer for Detroit. In exchange, the Detroit Red Wings received the rights to a big, young defenseman named Aaron Ward. Back in Ann Arbor, Ward wasn't exactly jumping up and down on the kitchen table. He was running laps around it, screaming with joy. "I have never seen a kid that happy in my entire life," Oliver says. In the living room, Oliver, Wiseman, and Stone were watching television, while their teammate was loudly celebrating his new status as the property of the Detroit Red Wings. "From there, we pretty much assumed he was leaving," Oliver said. "You don't trade for a guy like that if you think you are going to have to wait a year to sign him." When Ward officially signed with the Red Wings, it shocked nobody. @a@ "Stewie was the one that surprised us all," a fraction more his rookie season than a year's scholarship to Michigan is worth, and so he would have been better off staying a Wolverine. However, Ward is not just living off his minor league salary. When he turned pro, he received a $250,000 signing bonus. Besides, says Ward, money was never the only issue. "I am a 100 percent different hockey player than I was at Michigan," he says. Ward says he is not disappointed to be an Adirondack - and not Detroit - Red Wing. "Anybody who thinks that I had visions of grandeur - that I would be in Detroit, starring -just doesn't know me," he says. "I had an opportunity to play more games and develop as a player, and I took it." e@0 When the CCHA held its annual preseason luncheon on Sept. 29, 1993, the hot topic was this new trend of players leaving school early for the NHL. Aside from Michigan State coach Ron Mason, who called the exodus "a cancer right now in this league," most of the coaches did not express strong reservations about players leaving early. In fact, the coaches tried to put a positive spin on the situation. After all, if the NHL wants so many of the league's players, then the CCHA must be a pretty good conference, right? Lake Superior State coach Jeff Jackson's comments were typical of most of the coaches. "Our conference, in particular, is a very NHL-style conference," Jackson said. The team everyone was talking about was Michigan, which was coming off its second straight NCAA semifinals appearance but had lost two of its best players a year early. Apparently, Berenson's feelings about Stewart and Ward had not changed. "Cam Stewart will make more money in the NHL in three years than I made in my whole career," said Berenson, an outstanding NHL player for 17 seasons. "But that's OK." OK for Stewart, anyway. "I don't think Ward is leaving for the right reasons," Berenson said. "Sometimes (leaving) is the right thing to do, and sometimes it isn't. This would have been Ward's year to be a dominant college defenseman." e0" Ward says he did not make a mistake. His biggest disappointment has not been the demotion, but the fans in Glens Falls. They are, well, you wouldn't want to refer to them as hicks, but ... "They're clueless," says Ward, laughing. "The guys have more hair than the girls, and the girls have more facial hair than the guys. It's a social faux pas not to inbreed in this town. "But they are great people." The great irony here is that while Ward has been criticized for making a mistake, Stewart is the one who most regrets the decision to leave. He calls his former housemates at least once a week. "He always tells us how much he misses Michigan," Oliver says. "I don't know that he regrets leaving, but he misses school." 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